Orlando’s Arnold Palmer Hospital Layout Strategy-1.pptx
Letter Format
1. USING THE LETTER FORMAT
The lecture will be of two main parts:
•Introduction
•Parts of a Letter
Plus Two Sample Letter Formats
2. INTRODUCTION
Letters are ordinarily used to send
relatively short messages to:
customers
Clients
Government agencies
and other readers outside the
writer’s organization.
3. The Parts of a letter include:
((7 Parts
1. Heading
2. Inside Address
3. Salutation
4. Subject Line
5. Body
6. Complementary Close
7. Special Notations
4. Two variations of the letter format are
will be discussed towards the end of the
lecture:
Figures A – 1
and A – 2.
Both variations have the same parts.
5. 1. Heading
• The heading gives your address (but not your
name( and the date.
Words in the heading are usually spelled out:
Street, Avenue, and so on. Exceptions: e.g.
P.O Post Office’s two-letter
NY for New York ..etc.
• Most likely, the letter you send at work will be
typed on “letterhead” stationery that has your
company’s name, address, and phone number
already printed on it. The date will be the only
part of the heading you will have to provide.
Figures A – 1 and A – 2 show examples.
6. 2. Inside Address
The inside address gives:
– the name and address of the person to whom you
are sending the letter.
– Where appropriate, include the person’s title and
position.
– By custom, the titles Mr., Mrs., and Dr. are
abbreviated, but other titles are usually written
out in full: Professor, Senator.
– The reader’s title is usually typed before his or her
name, and the reader’s position is typed after it. If
your reader uses a middle initial, include it:
7. MIAMI UNIVERSITY Department of English
Bachelor Hall
Oxford, Ohio 45056
513 529/5221
October 12, 19—
Mr. Paul Ring
P.O. Box 143
Watson, Illinois 62473
Dear Mr. Ring:
I am delighted that you wish to learn about Miami University’s master’s degree program in technical and scientific communication.
This professional, practice-oriented program prepares people for careers in which they will help specialists in scientific, technical, and
other fields communicate their knowledge in an understandable and useful way. The job market for our graduates is excellent.
People studying with us complete three semesters of course work and an internship. Within this framework, we strive to tailor each
student’s course of study to his or her particular interests and career objectives. Consequently, our graduates work in a wide variety of
jobs and deal with many types of communication. These types include instruction manuals for computers and other high-tech
equipment, informational booklets given to cancer patients, technical advertising, corporate procedure books, and technical reports
and proposals in many fields, such as chemistry, aerospace engineering, pharmaceuticals, environmental protection, and health care. A
special feature of our program is that it prepares people to advance rapidly in the profession – to management, policy-making roles, or
ownership of their own communication companies.
We welcome applications from people with undergraduate degrees in many different subjects, including English and the other
humanities, communication, natural and social sciences, engineering and other technical fields, art, business, and education. We strive
to obtain graduate assistantships or other financial aid for every student accepted into the program who requests it.
I am enclosing a booklet describing our MTSC program in detail. If you wish to learn about similar programs at other schools, you
may want to purchase a copy of Academic Programs in Technical Communication, which is sold by the Society for Technical
Communication, 901 N. Stuart Street, Suite 904, Arlington, VA 22203-1854.
If you have any questions about the MTSC program, please feel welcome to write, call, or visit.
Sincerely,
C. Gilbert Storms, Director
Master’s Degree Program in
Technical and Scientific Communication
Enclosure: Booklet
Excellence is Our Tradition
8. Salutation
• The salutation is the letter writer’s
way of saying “hello.” By custom, a
salutation includes the word Dear,
usually followed by the reader’s
title, last name, and a colon (:(
10. Dear Mr. Dobheck:
• If you know your reader well enough to use
his first name in conversation, you may use
it in your salutation. In that case, use a
comma rather than a colon:
• e.g. Dear Leon,
• If you do not know the name of the
appropriate to address, you may use the
name of the department or organization in
the salutation:
11. e.g. Dear Customer Relations
Department:
When you do not know the name of
the person, avoid using Dear, Sir or
Gentlemen. These salutations are
considered objectionable because of
the assumption they make about
the sex of the addressee.
12. • Subject Line
• A subject line typically contains no
more than eight words. It usually
begins with the word Subject or Re,
followed by a colon (Figure A – 1).
Here are two examples:
Subject: Response to Your Letter of
March 8, 19 –
Re: Continuing Problems with the
SXD
13. • A subject line focuses the reader’s attention
on the topic of your message and makes it
easier to relocate your letter in the file.
Phrase your subject line in the same reader-centered
way you phrase the rest of your
communication. Avoid phrases like
“responses to Your Questions.” Use precise
phrase, such as “Near-Term Risks of
Investing in Southeast Asia.” Be brief but
specific. Bolding also helps focus the
readers attention on the purpose of the
letter.
14. • Although subject lines are helpful
to readers, many letters are sent
without them. If you are unsure
about whether to include one,
consider the custom in your
organization and the extent to
which a subject line will help your
reader.
15. • Body
• The body of a letter contains your
message. Except in rare instances,
it is single-spaced with a double
space between paragraphs. The
paragraphs are usually short – ten
lines or fewer. However, use longer
paragraphs if you feel they are
better suited to your message.
16. Customarily the body of a letter consists of:
• a beginning,
• a middle,
• and an end.
In most letters, the beginning is one
paragraph long. It announces the writer’s
reason for writing. In letters between
people who communicate frequently, it
may include personal news.
17. • The main discussion of the writer’s
topic is usually contained in the
middle section.
• The final paragraph usually
includes a social gesture – thanking
the other person for writing,
expressing a willingness to be of
further assistance, or the like.
18. Complimentary Close
• The complimentary close is the letter
writer’s way of saying “goodbye.” It
consists of one of several familiar
phrases, such as:
• Your truly, Sincerely, or Cordially.
The first letter of the first word is
capitalized. A comma follows the
complimentary close.
19. • When you are writing to someone
you do not know, select one of the
more formal phrases for your
complimentary close, such as
Sincerely or Sincerely yours. When
writing to an acquaintance, use
more informal phrase, such as
Cordially or With best wishes.
20. • Signature Block
• Your name appears twice in the signature block, once in
handwriting (with a pen) and once typed. Together, the
complimentary close and signature block look like this:
•
• Complimentary Sincerely yours, Cordially,
• Close
• SignatureRaphael Goodman Constance
• Typed name Raphael Goodman
Constance Idanopolis
• Title Senior Auditor Head, Sales Division
21. • Special Notations
• Following the signature block, you may include
certain notations:
• Identification of typist. If the letters is typed by
someone other than you, the typist may include your
initials and his or hers, usually against the left-hand
margin. Your initials appear first, in uppercase letter,
followed by the typist’s initials, in lowercase letter. A
colon or slash usually separates the two:
• TLK:smc TLKL/smc
• Sometimes, only the typist’s initials appear, always in
lowercase letters.
22. • Identification of Word-processing or computer
file.
• Letters typed on a word processor or computer may
include on a separate line the name or number of the
file in which the letter is stored, as in Figure A – 1.
Such a notation is especially common where printed
copies of the letter will be distributed for review
before it is sent to its intended reader and where the
letter might, with some slight modification, also be
sent to other readers. The file identification helps the
writer or the typist find the file again to make the
changes.
23. • Enclosure. If you are enclosing items with
your letter, you may want to note that fact.
You may also specify how many items you are
enclosing or what the items are:
• Enclosure
• Enclosure (2)
• Enclosure: Brochure
24. • Distribution. If copies of the letter are going
to be sent to other people, you may list their
names in alphabetical order. The abbreviation
cc stands for “carbon copy,” but it used also
when the copies are made on a copying
machine:
• cc: T. K. Brandon
• F. Lassiter
• P. B. Waverly
25. • Sometimes, it is a good idea to include the titles,
positions, and locations of the people who are getting
copies. If you work in a large organization, some of
your readers may not know who the others are unless
you identify them. Also, such information will help
future readers know what departments received
copies of the communication.
• cc: T. K. Brandon, Vice President for Research
• Dr. F. Lassiter, Manager, Cryogenics Laboratory
• P. B. Waverly, Purchasing Department
26. • Placement of Text on the Page
• The customary margins for page-length letter
are 1 to 1½ inches on the top and sides.
Typically, the bottom margin is ½ inch deeper
than the top margin. With letters that are
shorter than a full page, you might position the
middle line a few lines above the middle of the
page. Unless you re an experienced typist, you
may have to type a short letter twice, once to
see how long it will run and once to position it
attractively.
27. • When you write a letter that is longer than one page, use plain
paper for the second and subsequent pages rather than
letterhead stationery. At the top of the page, type the name of
the addressee, the page number, and the date. Here are two
commonly used arrangements:
• 1)
• Hasim K. Lederer
November 16, 19 –
•
__________________________________________________
__
• 2)
• Katherine W. Hodges
• November 16, 19 –
28. • Leave two or three spaces below the heading
before continuing the text. Always place the
heading ½ to 1 inch from the top of the sheet,
no matter how much blank space is left after
the end of the letter. If only your
complimentary close and signature block
appear on the final page, you might retype the
preceding page with larger top and bottom
margins so that you can carry over more
material to the final page